A Newsman’s Secret

The woman with Bob Caldwell on the day he died works as an internet call girl.

Over the past two weeks, readers of The Oregonian have witnessed an extraordinary episode in the newspaper’s 162-year history.

On March 10, Bob
Caldwell, a respected Oregon journalist and longtime editor of the
newspaper’s opinion pages, died of a heart attack at age 63. Two days
later, the newspaper told readers Caldwell had suffered his fatal heart
attack while in his car.

The
next day, March 13, the paper printed a correction—based on a police
report—that revealed Caldwell had suffered the heart attack after a sex
act in the Tigard apartment of a 23-year-old woman.

The
woman told police she had befriended Caldwell at Portland Community
College, that Caldwell knew she didn’t have much money, and he
occasionally gave her cash for books in exchange for sex acts.

Suddenly, a local journalist’s obituary had become international news.

In a March 16 column, Oregonian
Editor Peter Bhatia explained that the original error came after one of
the newspaper’s veteran editors provided false information about how
and where Caldwell had died. Bhatia fired the editor, Kathleen
Glanville, although he didn’t tell readers he had done so.

Glanville apologized to the newsroom, explaining she had hoped to protect Caldwell’s reputation.

WW has
subsequently learned Glanville did more than provide a false story to
her paper: She also drove to the young woman’s apartment and moved
Caldwell’s vehicle from the scene. Glanville declined comment.

Part of Bhatia’s message was that, once The Oregonian had the police report, the newspaper had done due diligence in checking out the young woman’s background.

“We went to the
apartment and talked to neighbors and the woman’s mother,” Bhatia told
readers. “We checked her criminal record; again, a typical response. She
has only minor offenses, none related to sex or prostitution.”

Bhatia’s account is far from the whole story.

The young woman
Caldwell visited was a full-time call girl whom one admiring client, in
an online review, called “the reigning princess of the West Hills.”

Using Internet archives and public records, WW
found that the woman has been advertising her services for three years
on a regional website called TNA Board (warning: not safe for work), often used by hookers and johns.
Her advertisements feature explicit photographs of her performing oral
sex, by all accounts her specialty.

She charges up to
$200 an hour and tells prospective johns she won’t take them on as
clients without at least two references from other prostitutes. As she
put it in her ad on tnaboard.com, “I do not see newbies!”

WW found no evidence Caldwell met the woman through the Internet.

The woman declined to answer WW’s questions. She expressed sorrow about Caldwell’s death.

“I feel extremely sad
and helpless that I was unable to do more to save his life,” she said
in a statement. “His death will haunt me for the rest of my life.”

WW has chosen not to name the woman or use her online pseudonym.

According to records,
the woman was born in another Western state and moved to the Portland
area about 10 years ago. She graduated from a local high school where
she was a cheerleader.

In 2007, the woman
was convicted on a misdemeanor theft charge. In 2009, when she was 20,
she began advertising as a prostitute on tnaboard.com.

On her Web page on
the site, she mentioned attending classes but said she was available to
johns during the week, for a total of 43 hours Monday through Friday.
She signed her posts with a quote from the Native American painter Fritz
Scholder: “Life is short and death is long.”

Clients who wrote reviews of her on tnaboard.com praised her technique—“to die for,” as one poster described.

She said she took
calls at her Tigard apartment, sometimes meeting clients at Portland
strip clubs or private sex parties. She advertised herself as
independent—no pimp or madam, a claim WW couldn’t independently verify.

Her mother, who was at her daughter’s apartment when a WW
reporter knocked on the door, says she was aware of her daughter’s
work. In online posts, the young woman explained she called her mother
before seeing clients to “check in” for safety reasons.

The woman’s mother told WW that her daughter did not know who Caldwell was, or that he worked for The Oregonian, until after his death.

BOB CALDWELL

IMAGE: Facebook

Though his wasn’t a household name, Caldwell had influence
in Oregon that surpassed many public figures. More than 600 people
attended his March 17 memorial service, which was packed with
politicians, business leaders and Oregonian employees who had known Caldwell for decades.

He
had spent a lifetime in Oregon journalism. A University of Oregon
journalism graduate, Caldwell worked for newspapers in Albany,
Springfield and Gresham, where he was publisher for the local newspaper,
the Outlook. He joined The Oregonian in 1983 and two years later became the paper’s metropolitan editor.

He served two years
as the newspaper’s first public editor, and in 1995 took over as editor
of the newspaper’s editorial board. Caldwell oversaw more than 10,000
editorials in that time, touching on every aspect of Oregon life. His
was often the final say when it came to the newspaper’s political
endorsements. And he oversaw editorials about the Oregon State Hospital
that won the Pulitzer Prize in 2006.

In his column after
Caldwell’s death, Bhatia noted that in 2010 he had chosen not to publish
a story about Caldwell’s arrest for DUII. (He pleaded no contest.) At
the time, Bhatia’s decision triggered anger in the newsroom, especially
when other news outlets, including WW, did report the story.

This time, explaining
his decision to reveal the details of Caldwell’s death, Bhatia
acknowledged the difficult situation but believed the newspaper had to
correct the record.

“Frankly, this was a
no-win choice,” Bhatia wrote in his column. “If we went with the story,
we would be criticized for besmirching a good man and further hurting
his family. If we held the details back, we would be accused of a
cover-up.”

Bhatia said the
original erroneous report about Caldwell’s death resulted from a lack of
skepticism about what otherwise seemed a routine matter.

Since 2000, The Oregonian, with Caldwell as editorial page editor, published at least 16 unsigned editorials on prostitution.

“Some people will tell you that prostitution is a victimless crime,” an Oregonian
editorial said in 2001. “They’re wrong…. [W]hen you think about it, you
realize prostitution isn’t ‘victimless’ even when prostitutes reach the
grand old ages of 15 or 17 or 19.”

In 2008, another Oregonian
editorial linked prostitution to “distress, blight and violence,” and
noted that many women in the sex trade “are victims of incest and abuse,
have a parent in prison or a drug problem.”

In another 2008
editorial, the newspaper lamented the “betrayal” of then-New York Gov.
Eliot Spitzer, who’d been caught in a prostitution scandal.

“He of all people
understood the bright line between legal and illegal conduct, between
public trust and opprobrium, and between treating people like human
beings and treating them as objects,” the editorial said. “If he indeed
consorted with high-priced call girls…he is guilty of criminality,
indecency and gross hypocrisy, making it unimaginable that he can govern
his state effectively again.”

As recently as 2010, The Oregonian editorialized in favor of a city proposal to seize assets—including cars and cash—from pimps and johns.